"John,
You remind me of ME!
As did I when I "barged in here" a year ago, you just want to convince the rest of us to see the "rightness" of your viewpoints"
It doesn't work here - why not just enjoy your kit - post some W/NW threads and have some fun?"You are wrong there, John. You might have stopped using the
constantly improving computer technology in the form of a fast
computer at home, but not everybody has."
That's a little patronizing, isn't it? I was simply having an amiable disagreement with Bill, in which I think there's about a 40% chance that he's right and I'm wrong; I'm not trying to press anything on anybody, I was just trying to express a viewpoint.
"You are wrong there, John. You might have stopped using the
constantly improving computer technology in the form of a fast
computer at home, but not everybody has."
I really don't have any argument with you; we don't even disagree, although you seem to think so. I am constantly improving my computer tech, and expect to upgrade sometime next year form my present Mac collection to the new Intel Macs. What I was arguing was that the pace of (practical) change has slowed. The arrival of cells phones was a revolution. The addition of cell phone cameras does not compare. The arrival of "Vista" (assuming it ever arrives) will be good, but the change from DOS to Windows was revolutionary. If you get a dual core 64-bit computer, how much faster can you word process? How much faster can you browse the net? Would you believe "no faster?" The arrival of computer word processing and the net were both revolutionary. The arrival of dual-core 64-bit word processing will not be.
The argument that I am making isn't that computers aren't becoming more and more important, and the technology better and better, I'm simply saying that in my lifetime I've seen a large number of technical revolutions -- the arrival of mass-market TV, space travel, desk-top computers, etc. The further refinements of these things do not seem revoutionary; they seem llike refinements.
My point with the digital cameras was that as revolutionary as the first four or five years were -- say, from 1999 to 2004 -- the future is more going to involve refinement than revolution. If Canon goes to 22 mp, does that mean you can't do good work with a 16mp 1DsII? Of course not. The question that started all of this is whether the M8 will be obsolete in a couple of years, if digital cameras will have to turn every two or three years or become obsolete. My view is, "No." I think they have reached a level of refinement where people will use them with satisfaction for much longer than that. I do think that new models will show improvements, just as the M6 had improvements over the M3. But it will be more like that, than, say, the M3 over the Brownie. That was a revolution. From M3 to M6 was refinement.
In this argument, Bill has taken a different position. He is a smart guy and he may be right. I happen to disagree with him on this point, but if I saw him out hitchhiking, I wouldn't try to run him over, at least, not more than once.
JC